To go back to the .dash website:

As we told you in August, we have been collaborating with
Cut Chorus on their "Camera Test" project, directing a short film
written by Mark Murphy.

The short, "Flames Of Passion (With Apologies To Noel Coward)", is
essentially a straight to camera monologue, with a character loosely based on
the leading man from "Brief Encounter". We shot the film at the end
of August at Cut Chorus' studio in East London, with production company Art War
Entertainment. It was a fantastic shoot, with a knowledgeable crew ... and some
rather lovely kit at our disposal. We had decided we wanted to shoot the
majority of the film in keeping with the striking aesthetic of "Brief
Encounter"; so focused on hard, side lighting, close, evocative shots and
a heightened performance from Luke Harrison, our brilliant performer.

Eoin and I opted to edit the film at home in Margate - rather than at the
studio in London - and we were therefore sent a hard-drive full of footage at the
beginning of September. It was a sharp learning curve for us (who knew a short
film could take so long to render?), but very much a rewarding one.
Taking inspiration from David Lynch’s “Eraserhead” we experimented with quick
cuts and a grainy quality, to introduce an unsettling tension. With a nod to “Brief
Encounter” we took the rhythm of a train to push the film – and our leading man
– forwards. This was underscored by the sounds of trains mixed with Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 2, the soundtrack to the original
film.

The film was screened last night at Marylebone
Gardens, to an enthusiastic invited audience.
We will be uploading the film in the next couple of weeks, to share with
you. Below are a few photographs taken at the shoot, courtesy of Cut Chorus.
Not quite sure why Eoin and I have our elbows so symmetrically raised in the
make-up shot … any ideas?!